This trope is when a real-life celebrity or famous figure is playing a fictionalized version of themselves, as a main character or recurring character. This is mostly a television trope, but there are film examples. For shows that take place in an alternate Hollywood, such as Curb Your Enthusiasm, Entourage and The Larry Sanders Show, this is the norm. It would be hard to believe it's Hollywood if you'd never heard of any of the "stars", would it?

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This real celebrity is playing themselves, but they are inserted into fictional circumstances, play alongside clearly fictitious characters and sometimes have fictional backstories in relation to those fictional characters. This differs from an Autobiographical Role, where the celebrity is playing themselves in the actual story of their life.

As Himself is usually credited as, well: Report Siht as Herself. Though occasionally you will see Report Siht as "Report Siht". An actor might request the latter if they want it to be clearer that this is a purely fictionalized version of themselves.

Occasionally, there will be an example of this with a deceased star/famous figure. This will often be done using archive footage, but the trope still applies because they are still playing themselves in fictional circumstances (Forrest Gump didn't actually meet John F. Kennedy or Lyndon Johnson, folks).

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Remember, if it's just a short gag, or one episode, that's either a Special Guest or a straight Cameo.

What's the difference between this and The Danza? Ask yourself this... is Alice playing a character who just happens to be named Alice as well? Or is she actually playing Alice? The first one is The Danza. The latter is As Himself.

In Pokémon XY, when a Pikachu movie is made, we see the dubbing process for a bit. A female seiyuu who looks like Ikue Otani voices Super Pikachu, The Hero played by Pikachu. However, we only hear her voice in the movie itself, and yes, Super Pikachu is voiced by Ikue Otani outside of the universe.

The epic finale of Pop Team Epic has Pipimi turned to stone and Popuko crying over the loss of her friend, until Shouta Aoi in front of a Green Screen shows up and reveals he has the power to travel back in time to save her.

Audio Plays

In the audiobook version of World War Z, which is performed by a full cast with different actors reading each of the characters interviewed for the book, the character of "The Interviewer" is specifically identified as Max Brooks (actual author of the book) and his part is performed by Brooks himself.

Comic Books

Dan Choi, known for his activism in the effort to repeal the Don't Ask, Don't Tell policy, appears in issue #4 of Batwoman's run in Detective Comics. He is attending West Point with Kate Kane and speaks to her just before she is outed and "separated" from the military. He was consulted for the story in that issue and receives "special thanks to 1LT Daniel Choi (USMA 2003) for his generous assistance in research for this issue" on the cover page.

An issue of Marvel's Count Duckula book features Geraldo Rivera as a live photo image on the cover (with a cartoon Duckula) and a cartoon image in the body of the story. It's a send-up of Rivera's ill-fated attempt to open Al Capone's vault and the show where he suffers a broken nose when a guest hurls a chair through the studio.

An issue of Marvel Team Up has Spider-Man attend the broadcast of an episode of Saturday Night Live and battling Silver Samurai alongside the cast. The SNL episode was hosted by Stan Lee who appears as well.

29 days after the sinking of RMS Titanic, a 10-minute-long movie Saved from the Titanic (now lost) was released. The leading star and a co-writer of the script was Dorothy Gibson - a genuine Titanic survivor, playing as a girl named Dorothy, and filmed in the same clothes she was rescued in.

Neil Patrick Harris as "Neil Patrick Harris" in the three Harold and Kumar movies. He requested not to be credited "as Himself", to make it clear he's not a drug-sniffing, car-stealing womanizer in Real Life (he is in fact, the complete opposite — an upstanding gentleman and in a stable relationship with David Burtka; i.e. no drugs, no stealing cars, and one guy, not many women). Burtka himself gets in on the act in A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas, using their real-life relationship as a cover for their characters' sordid behavior, and gets the same credits treatment ("David Burtka" played by David Burtka).

Forrest Gump meets many famous figures throughout his travels, some played by actors, but others played by archive footage. Both times he meets the president, it's done using archive footage. Obviously fictional circumstances, since Forrest Gump didn't really exist.

Bill Murray's appearance in Zombieland was widely promoted as a Cameo, but it actually falls into this territory, since he's in the movie for quite a bit of time (playing himself) and is actually the only other non-flashback speaking character outside of the main four.

Bill Murray again in Space Jam, wherein he eventually fills out the ranks of the Tune Squad to avert a forfeiture of the game. (In fact, the trope applies for pretty much all the live-action stars of the movie, aside from Wayne Knight and a few others.)

The Blues Brothers plays with this, featuring the band members playing themselves. The majority of them were part of the original backing band, and are well known blues and R&B legends, including Steve Cropper, Donald "Duck" Dunn (both of whom are in the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame as members of Booker T and The MG's), and Matt "Guitar" Murphy. Paul Shaffer turns up in Blues Brothers 2000, but he's not actually playing himself — he instead adopts a thick French accent, playing the role of Queen Mousette's aide, Marco. He later takes off the wig and performs with the band, though, for which he gets credited both as Marco and as himself on the end credits list.

the cast of Taxi — except for Danny DeVito, who was already playing Kaufman's manager

David Letterman, Paul Shaffer, and the Late Night with David Letterman band, re-creating Kaufman's infamous appearance on Late Night With David Letterman with wrestler Jerry Lawler (also playing himself) — though filmed on the Late Show set, with no real attempt made to make anyone look younger.

Lorne Michaels, as the producer of Saturday Night Live (though he wasn't actually producer when Kaufman appeared on the show).

The late Miami Dolphins football team owner Joe Robbie played himself in the movie adaptation of Black Sunday in which terrorists are going to attack the Super Bowl. He's interviewed about security at the Orange Bowl by Robert Shaw, who is playing Israeli counter-terrorist David Kabakov.

Paolo Roberto as himself in The Girl Who Played With Fire, second film of The Millennium Trilogy. The Swedish language version, anyway; whether he will be cast as himself in the Hollywood version is yet to be seen.

Fred Niblo, a real MGM movie director, has a comic supporting role in Free and Easy as Fred Niblo, MGM director, who has a world of difficulty in getting Elmer J. Butts (Buster Keaton) to memorize a single line of dialogue.

An unusual mutation can be found in the feature-length version of The Wizard of Speed and Time: the cast list at the end of the film starts with "Mike Jittlov — The Wizard" followed immediately by "The Wizard — Himself".

Attorney Ed McDonald plays himself in GoodFellas when Karen and Henry Hill look to the Witness Protection program; he handled the Hills' case in real life. The Hills' dialogue was taken verbatim from the transcript of their conversation while McDonald ad-libbed his dialogue.

United 93 featured many of the actual people involved in the original events, including Ben Sliney, former U.S. Federal Aviation Administration's National Operation Manager and the man who ordered the US airspace to a National Ground Stop during 9/11. He played himself, reenacting those same events, and does a damn good job of it.

Weird Al also sings the theme to Spy Hard while wearing a white tuxedo in the opening credits. When his name comes up in the credits for writing and singing the theme song, he points to it.

In the German movieKeinohrhasen, the main character is a paparazzo and sneaks into the engagement party of Yvonne Catterfeld (pop singer) and Wladimir Klitschko (professional boxer). While these two celebrities play themselves, their relationship is entirely made up.

Contagion has Dr. Sanjay Gupta cameo in an interview with Dr. Cheever.

In Jerry Lewis' The Bellboy, Lewis plays himself and the bellboy Stanley. After Milton Berle (as himself) lectures Stanley, he runs into Jerry Lewis (as himself), and wonders if there can be "two of them." Berle goes off, then Lewis runs into a bellboy (played by Berle), and Lewis does an extended double-take.

In All the President's Men Frank Wills, the security guard who finds the masking tape on the door in the opening scene, is played by Frank Wills, the security guard who actually found the masking tape on the door at the Watergate. A lot of politicians and reporters appear as themselves in archival footage, including President and Mrs. Nixon, Spiro Agnew, Ron Ziegler, Walter Cronkite, etc.

The original Angels in the Outfield included (simulated) newsreel interviews with (actual) famous people concerning whether or not McGovern is actually conversing with angels. Among them is Ty Cobb, who simply says "All I can say is the game of baseball has certainly changed!"

In The Fighter, Micky Ward's trainer/Lowell police sergeant Mickey O'Keefe is played by... Micky Ward's trainer/Lowell police sergeant Mickey O'Keefe. O'Keefe had never acted before and was reluctant to take the role, though Mark Wahlberg was eventually successful in persuading him.

Dale Earnhardt Jr. asks Ricky for an autograph in one scene. He is seen in the garage at Talledega in a deleted scene.

Ricky beats Jamie McMurray by running in reverse.

Both the NASCAR on FOX broadcasting team (Mike Joy, Larry McReynolds, and Darrell Waltrip) and the NASCAR on NBC team of 2005 (Bill Weber, Wally Dallenbach Jr., and Benny Parsons (died 2007)), are present; the FOX team is used for two races in the first half of the movie, while the NBC team is covering the Talladega race at the end of the movie.

There's even a funny moment where an NBC reporter in the stands claims to have spotted Kenny Rogers and Larry Bird on two different occasions, but Weber, Parsons and Dallenbach have a hard time believing him, suspecting he might have had a stroke.

Extremely common in old westerns, especially of the "singing cowboy" variety. Roy Rogers, Dale Evans, Gene Autry, etc. all made many, many films playing characters with their own names.

A variation is seen in Under Siege, where Erika Eleniak's character is introduced to a man by another character by showing him a Playboy centerfold and saying she's "Miss July 1989." While the character goes by a different name than the actress, she was in fact the actual Playmate of that month.

The 2010 film Round Ireland With a Fridge, based on Tony Hawks' 1999 book Round Ireland With a Fridge, based on Tony Hawks actually travelling round Ireland with a fridge in 1997, stars Tony Hawks as Tony. The follow-up, 2012's Playing the Moldovans at Tennis, also stars Hawks as himself. (Arthur Smith's role in the book and actual events is taken by Stephen Frost playing himself, rather than have an actor "do" the inimitable Smith.)

Chris Berman plays himself in the 2005 remake of The Longest Yard — and since he's actually calling the game, you're hearing him a lot in the third act. Jim Rome also briefly appears as himself.

Pro Wrestlers vs. Zombies features multiple wrestlers (as well as one Penthouse Pet and several members of the production staff) As Themself since the premise is that they were invited to a particular wrestling exhibition before the Zombie Apocalypse starts.

Lawyer and politician Fred Thompson started a prolific acting career in his forties when he was asked to play himself in Marie, about a client of his who fought a parole-bribery scheme.

Offbeat actor John Malkovich plays offbeat actor John Malkovich in the appropriately named Being John Malkovich, although there are several significant differences between the character and the real person, as well as a couple thrown in just to make the point that they're not meant to be exactly the same (for instance, the film makes a point of mentioning that Malkovich's middle name is Horatio, while the real Malkovich's is Gavin).

A variation in Rogue One. Cassian Andor is played by Diego Luna. In the Latin-American Spanish dub, his lines were dubbed over by... Diego Luna.

Played with in Jolson Sings Again, the second of two biopics of singer Al Jolson. The film chronicles Jolson's later life, including the making of the first biopic, The Jolson Story. Actor Larry Parks not only plays Jolson, but plays himself playing Jolson in the filmmaking scenes.

The 15:17 to Paris: Spencer Stone, Anthony Sadler and Alek Skarlatos, the three American soldiers who heroically stopped a terrorist attack on a French train in Real Life, are played by themselves.

In the 1923 comedy The Extra Girl, silent stars William Desmond and Billy Bevan appear as themselves.

Literature

Bret Easton Ellis' novel, Lunar Park is narrated in first person by Bret Easton Ellis, who is, like in the real world, the author of American Psycho and several other successful novels. The events in the novel, however, are completely fictional.

Similarly, Philip Roth's novel Operation Shylock is narrated in first person by the famous Jewish-American author, Philip Roth. While most of the events in the book are fictional, it contains segments of a real interview Roth made with Israeli novelist Aharon Appelfeld.

Stieg Larsson wrote in Swedish boxer/tv-host Paolo Roberto as a character in The Girl Who Played With Fire, book two of The Millennium Trilogy. Guess who played him in the movie?

Al Franken's book Why Not Me? is all about a fictionalized, Jerkass version of Al Franken running for President of the United States. He makes it clear in the Afterword that he is not "the asshole portrayed in the book."

In-Verse example: In The Barsoom Project, actor Robin Bowles plays himself in the "fat ripper" Fimbulwinter Game. Participants speculate that the portly Bowles signed on to help him lose weight for an upcoming role.

Played with by Steven Zoltan Brust, whose Dragaera novels have featured multiple passing references to a writer from a very distant realm (implied to be our own Earth) who has consulted with in-Verse characters about their stories or their world's history. This mysterious writer is referenced only by the initials "SZB".

Christopher Isherwood has several novels narrated by Christopher Isherwood. Initially Isherwood used his middle names, William Bradshaw, as his narrator but later decided that was literarily dishonest.

Played with in Monty Python's Flying Circus, in which everyone would so often break character to remark how silly a sketch is that it felt like you were watching the actual members of Monty Python struggling to put on a decent TV show.

Porn star Sasha Grey appeared in several episodes as herself and Vince's girlfriend.

The Gene Autry Show featured country singer Gene Autry playing a fictional version of himself taking part in a series of western adventures (his exact role, which saw him as a ranch hand in one week and a sheriff in another, tended to change from episode to episode).

General Michael E. Ryan and General John P. Jumper, each the actual Chief of Staff of the Air Force at the time his episode aired, appeared as themselves in cameos on Stargate SG-1 in 2001 and 2004, respectively. Richard Dean Anderson recalls in a DVD featurette that he asked General Ryan if he had officers as irreverent as his character Jack O'Neill, and Ryan replied, "Son, yes we do have colonels like you and worse."

Rodney McKay: At least I didn't declassify Pluto from planet-status. Way to make all the little kids cry, Neil. That make you feel like a big man?

Seinfeld had several throughout the years. Most memorably, Keith Hernandez (the former New York Met), shows up as himself several times, before and after he dates Elaine. And technically, Jerry plays himself throughout the series, as evidenced by his appearance on the Today Show with Bryant Gumbel in The Puffy Shirt episode.

Baywatch - Lifeguard Michael "Newmie" Newman is played by Michael Newman, a real LA County lifeguard.

Star Trek: The Next Generation: Stephen Hawking appeared as a hologram of himself in "Descent: Part I", being the only person to play themselves in any Star Trek production. He played poker with Data and holograms of Sir Isaac Newton and Albert Einsteinandwon. (Brent Spiner mentioned in an interview that, as he was accompanying Hawking off-set, they passed the warp core set, and Hawking said "I'm working on that." Since Hawking's synthesized voice makes him a perfect Deadpan Snarker, Spiner said he's still not sure whether Hawking was kidding.)

Arguably, Joe Piscopo played himself in the second season episode "The Outrageous Okona", but he was only credited as "The Comic". Data picked him from a list of notable comics from history, so if it wasn't meant to be a genuine one—like Piscopo—any actor could have played The Comic.

Garry Shandling, Tea Leoni, and Wayne Federman all played themselves in The X-Files episode "Hollywood A.D."

Jerry Springer played himself in the episode "The Post-Modern Prometheus"

Walter Cronkite appears as himself, Ted's idol, in an episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show. Johnny Carson attends one of Mary's parties in the last season, but a blackout occurs so the audience only hears his voice. He's still credited as himself at the end.

John McEnroe appeared on CSI: New York, playing both himself and a look-alike who makes a hobby of impersonating him. Played with in an interrogation scene, where the look-alike is explaining that he didn't even watch tennis, while the real McEnroe looks on and bitches about his double (including an utterance of his now trademark "You cannot be serious!"), from behind the room's soundproof one-way mirror.

Country music group Rascal Flatts appeared as themselves in an episode of CSI, which centered around bassist Jay DeMarcus getting shocked by his bass guitar.

Clete Roberts plays himself in the Season 4 episode "The Interview" in Mash. Filmed in black-and-white Clete Roberts interviews the characters making the episode look like a documentary. Unlike most episodes where everything was scripted and little ad-libbed, in this episodes, the actors were given a lot of freedom to answer the questions. He would return in the Season 7 two-parter "Our Finest Hour" as well as the pilot of unsuccessful spinoff W*A*L*T*E*R.

Sir Terry Wogan appeared as himself presenting his current (at the time of filming) quiz show - and as a voice of the afterlife, passing on instructions to Saul - in the Series 2, Episode 2 of Being Human (UK).

The One-Episode Wonder TV pilot Heat Vision and Jack featured (and would have continued to feature) Ron Silver "As Himself". Despite playing a NASA assassin on this show, Silver was still an actor and at one point, a character points out that "he was the bad guy from Timecop".

"Mr. Monk and the Redheaded Stranger" is an episode-length cameo from Willie Nelson, who gets accused of shooting his road manager in a back alleyway. Monk is said to be a big Nelson fan (and Trudy was one, too), so he sets forth to clear Nelson's name.

Noticeably called back to in "Mr. Monk and the Blackout" when Monk mentions that he threw away a harmonica that Nelson gave him as gratitude to clearing his name, simply because he had played it before.

"Mr. Monk and the Airplane" has Tim Daly, interestingly Monk lead Tony Shalhoub's costar from Wings, show up on the plane Monk and Sharona are flying to New Jersey on.

"Mr. Monk Meets the Playboy" features a cameo by Danny Bonaduce himself, as one of Dexter Larsen's golfing buddies.

In "Mr. Monk Makes the Playoffs," Monk ends up getting press box tickets for himself and Mel Stottlemyre to sit with NBC's own Bob Costas in the broadcast booth for a playoff game. Apparently Monk helped Costas out on a favor a long time ago. Stottlemyre says it had something to do with a demented cat salesman. Costas elaborates: the cat salesman was not demented, he sold demented cats, like a psychotic calico kitten, and one cat that tried to kill him with a squeeze toy.

The Bionic Woman featured Evel Knievel as himself in Season 3 episode "Motorcycle Boogie", where he becomes an unwitting accomplice to Jaime when she tries to retrieve a stolen data tape from behind the Iron Curtain. Needless to say his trademark motorcycle stunts prove conveniently useful.

Mister Ed was always in the credits "as himself," even though he was voiced by Allan Rocky Lane (uncredited).

In El Chavo del ocho, Ramón Valdés is cast as Don Ramón, who was (as described by other actors in the series as well as Ramón's children) essentially himself, but without a stable income. Allegedly, when Chespirito had him cast as Don Ramón, the only instructions he gave Ramón was "be yourself".

Twin Peaks: Outside of the bands featured in the roadhouse, Monica Bellucci is perhaps the only person who is not portraying a character when she appears in a dream Gordon Cole had of her.

One episode of Scrubs featured the guy who played the Soup Nazi on Seinfeld, who JD immediately recognizes. He insists that he isn't the guy and that JD is mistaken, but JD eventually tricks him into saying the Soup Nazi's famous Catch-Phrase.

Bill Nye appears as himself on a Season 3 episode of Blindspot, albeit a version of himself who happens to be Patterson's father. Also, his Stargate Atlantis appearance (listed above) gets a nod when he references Rodney McKay as his academic rival.

Internet sensation Science Bob has been in three episodes: "The Quad Test", "No Ifs, Ands, or But-ers" and "She Blinded Him with Science (Bob)"

Soccer star Alex Morgan was in "The Quad Test".

WNBA star Candace Parker was in "I Want Candace".

Olympic ice dancers Alex and Maia Shibutan were in "The Great Mullet Caper".

Isaiah Thomasnote the current NBA player, not the long-retired Hall of Famer Isiah Thomas (as well as his two young sons Jaden and James) appeared in "Quadcodile Dundee"

The hour-long special had a number including Jack Griffo of The Thundermans as a fictionized version of himself, Alex Guarnaschelli of Food Network and Daniella Monet of Series/Victorious. Hoerver, due to the "Truman Show" Plot aspect of the episode, these actors could also be seen as also embodying this tripe In-Universe

Richard Wilson's fictional "radiography" Believe It! stars Richard as himself (and David Tennant as Young Richard). It also features a wide variety of Richard's showbiz friends, most of whom are played by impressionists. In Season 2, however, Celia Imrie and Sir Ian McKellen play themselves.

Alan Titchmarsh of Ground Force and Gardener's World fame once made an appearance in an episode of The Archers as the celebrity guest of honour at the village fete.

Theater

Stew, book writer and co-music writer of the semi-autobiographical show Passing Strange, starred in the original productions as The Narrator, who introduces himself in the first song as "Stew", which just adds to the strangeness because he's narrating a story based on the real Stew's life story, which is also strongly implied to be the character Stew's literal life story. It's a little confusing if you think about it too hard, so don't.

Things would have gotten really crazy if his understudy had ever gone on.

Video Games

In Left 4 Dead (and its sequel), each campaign is considered to be a separate "movie", in which the players take on the roles of the characters ("Alice as Bill, Bob as Francis, Xavier as Louis"...); whenever a character is played as a bot, the introduction screen and the ending credits both refer to him as "as himself/herself".

Every Grand Theft Auto game from the third onwards features Lazlow Jones as a radio personality (most often associated with talk radio shows), who hosts his own radio show in the real world. In addition, Lazlow is a major figure in the development of the series, being the chief writer in charge of managing the various radio stations that air in-game. He finally makes a physical appearance in Grand Theft Auto V, where he suffers various humiliations from the protagonists.

Rob Zombie, who provided the soundtrack for Twisted Metal III and 4 appeared as a playable character in Twisted Metal 4. In his ending, his wish is to "let the world hear the wails and war cries of a dead man's soul." He gets it in the form of a clip from one of his music videos.

Art Bell plays himself hosting a fictionalized version of Coast to Coast AM in Prey (2006). It is scripted to play out like real call-in segments of the show would, providing a from-Earth account of the in-game plot developments.

Lieutenant Colonel Oliver North was brought along to help produce Call of Duty: Black Ops II. He also voices himself in a brief cameo early on in the campaign.

The birds in Hatoful Boyfriend are stock images, the writer's own photography, and so on. One of the birds, Oko San, is represented with a photo of her own pet bird, Okosan. Unlike the other characters in the game, Oko San is a Partially Civilized Animal rather than a Civilized Animal, and while the others get human portraits, his is just a drawing of a pigeon.

Some of the later Lego Adaptation Games feature minifigures based on real people as characters, with their real-life counterparts providing the voices:

In Agents of Cracked, the two main characters are authors and editors of Cracked playing themselves. Dan O'Brien apparently plays a nerdier version of himself, when Michael Swaim plays a kinda weird, sociopathic version of himself.

Nyx Crossing's main trio is Josh, Frank, and Clint... played by Josh Medlock, Frank Levering, and Clint Bailey.

In a rare non-live action example, Andrew Hussie plays a somewhat plot significant role as himself in Homestuck. While he's still the one writing the comic, in many ways he's also part of the story itself. This includesbeing able to die.

OnCinema: A lot of the people who appear on the show, especially if they make more than one appearance, including Tim Heidecker, Gregg Turkington, Mark Proksch and Joe Estevez though they tend to play fictionalized versions of themselves.

Western Animation

While George Lowe (most famous as the voice of Space Ghost) made frequent cameos in Aqua Teen Hunger Force (often referred to by an alias or just going unnamed,) the episode "Antenna" is the only episode where he's explicitly playing himself.

Bud Abbott of the comedy team Abbott and Costello voices himself as a cartoon in the 1967 Hanna-Barbera cartoon of the team. The money he made was used to pay an outstanding IRS debt.

In Archer, Christian Slater plays a secret agent version of himself who goes by Slater.

This was done in The Critic several times, including the notable second season episode "Siskel and Ebert and Jay and Alice". Film critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert voice themselves throughout the whole episode.

An episode of Dennis the Menace (UK) featured Dennis entering a Blue Peter competition, with the then presenters playing themselves. In a nice bit of BBC synergy, this resulted in a Blue Peter segment in which they showed viewers how voice-acting works.

Family Guy subverts this and plays this straight, where most of the "As Themselves" are voiced by the core members of the voice cast. Occasionally, sometimes subtly, sometimes glaringly obviously, will an actual celebrity come to the show to voice themself.

The late Adam West played recurring character Mayor Adam West.

Carried over in Groening's other show, Futurama, where characters have played themselves in roles that vary from parodying, paying neat homages, or Actor Allusions to themselves.

In the Futurama episode "Where No Fan Has Gone Before" (otherwise known as the Star Trek episode), every member of the original cast reprised their roles, playing both themselves, AND were forced to play TOS' old characters "as themselves" during the episode. Well,ALMOSTeverymember...

The Simpsons has had more guest stars playing themselves than probably any show on television.

A strange example appears in the episode "Bart the Murderer", where Neil Patrick Harris plays himself, playing Bart in an in show movie. And Joe Mantegna plays himself playing Fat Tony in the same movie, as well as playing Fat Tony on the actual show.

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